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Westfjords Adventures is the only travel operator in the southern part of the Westfjords - offering a very good selection of tours to some pretty amazing sights in the Westfjords of Iceland. They are located in Patreksfjörður village, the biggest village in the southern part of the Westfjords.

This was our second day in the Westfjords and we were driving all the way from Reykjavík, so we spent the night with relatives on Barðaströnd. Early next morning we met up with Westfjord Adventures on the parking lot by the junction leading to Látrabjarg bird cliff.

We picked up more passengers on the way and off we went to visit the largest sea-bird cliff in Europe - the cliff of all cliffs in Iceland.

Látrabjarg bird cliff is the westernmost part of Iceland and one of the westernmost parts of Europe (24°32´3" west). It is often called the westernmost point of Europe if you skip the mid-Atlantic archipelago of Azores. Látrabjarg is up to 441 meters high and 14 km long and here you will find millions of sea-birds.

Látrabjarg is considered to be one of the most spectacular sea-bird cliffs in the world and the bird life here is really amazing. You will see razorbills, guillemot, the northern gannet and puffins in abundance - amongst many, many more sea-bird species.

Látrabjarg is sheer-sided and there is a painted white line to warn people against going too close to the edge. It should be common sense not to cross the line, but I have seen that many people don't pay any attention to the line. Be extra careful not to go too far to the edge. The puffin burrows make the ground closest to the cliffs hollow and dangerous to step on. I lay on my stomach and looked down at the birds as to not lose balance as it is a long way down!

Up to 60% of the Arctic puffin colony breeds in Iceland so there is a very good chance of seeing puffins if you visit Iceland during their nesting season. The puffins stay in Iceland from mid-May until mid-August each year and all in all, there are some 10 million puffins in Iceland during the summer time!!

The largest puffin colony in the world is in Vestmannaeyjar - Westman Island, which is a volcanic island just off the south shore of Iceland. I have been there and seen a myriad of puffins, but I have never been as close to puffins as I have been at Látrabjarg, it almost feels as if one can touch them. And they are so fearless and tame somehow. It is almost as they know that we are only there to watch them and take photos and will not harm them. And it feels like they are posing for us and checking us out ;)

You can see on my first photo that the wings of the puffin are a little too small, as it were, so when it flies it flaps its wings very rapidly - it is very cute to see a puffin fly :) The puffin wings are perfect for catching fish in the ocean though.

What is characteristic about the puffins is that they dig a burrow in which they lay only one egg a year, so usually, eggs are not picked from the puffins.

There are some great photo-opportunities at Látrabjarg, to say the least. I took so many different photos of the puffins but had to choose just a few of them to publish here. And it was hard to choose between them as you can get some extraordinary photos here.

I am in love with puffins, they are such cute birds. And how cute is the puffin in the photo above! I have one photo of a puffin, which had ventured up on the grassy side of the cliff and was strutting along, and when the August sun shone on its black back, it looked so much like a black cat from behind. I got a sudden urge to pick it up and cuddle it, but of course, that is not allowed. The puffins should never be touched - if you touch them they lose oil from their feathers which is essential for their survival.

As even though the puffins look so cute they know how to defend themselves and they have a powerful bite if they feel threatened - as the multi-Michelin Chef Gordon Ramsay found out the hard way when he tried kissing a puffin in the Westman Islands - the puffin bit his nose! You can find the video on Youtube, but it is kind of bloody, so I didn't want to publish it in my travel-blog.

I have seen that most visitors in Iceland want to see the puffins. You can see puffins in several places in Iceland, but Látrabjarg is my all time favourite. In the daytime the majority of the birds are still out at sea and in the evening they gather together in the cliffs in their thousands. We visited Látrabjarg from 10 am - 12 am and there were so many puffins in the cliffs.

The puffin which breeds in Iceland is sometimes called the "prófastur" in Icelandic, meaning the dean - as it is so distinguished looking. What makes the puffin stand out is the big orange, red and grey beak and the bright orange feet.

The puffins stay in Iceland from mid-April until mid-August when they start to leave the country. In winter time the puffins stay on the ocean and they don't come back until the next breeding season. In winter time the puffin loses the colour of the beak and the beak becomes grey, but I have never seen that as the birds are out at sea.

Our whole group gathered eagerly by the cliffs to see the puffins. In Látrabjarg cliff, the puffins are so used to humans that they don't budge and either totally ignore us or take a peek at us when we are not looking. We spent a lot of time with the puffins, adoring them and photographing them.

I have seen puffins on Grímsey island in the evening when the thousands of puffins had returned from the ocean. It was, of course, awesome, but I noticed that the puffins were a bit afraid of humans - as if I went too close to the edge the whole colony on that cliff got scared and flew away - not here on Látrabjarg cliff though.

There are of course a myriad of other sea-birds in the cliffs and I saw this cute little kittiwake chick on a ledge crying out for food. Its mother doesn't carry fish in its beak to give to their chicks but pukes into its mouth. I saw the mother kittiwake hovering over the bird and left them in peace ;)

This is what the grown-up kittiwakes look like. I have never been so close to the natural habitat of birds as in Látrabjarg. What an amazing place to visit!

We also spotted some grey seals in the ocean, do bring binoculars so you can see them up close - or use the zoom on your camera. They look like shining silver in the sunshine - ever so cute :)

There are two types of seals by Iceland, the common seal and the grey seal. The grey seal is much bigger than the common seal and can reach 2.5 meters in length and weigh over 300 kilos!

We hiked for a while on Látrabjarg and breathed in this beautiful nature filled with birds and seals. It was such a beautiful day :)

We walked down to the beach and just enjoyed being outside in fresh air on this warm sunny August day. Iceland's beaches are usually black lava beaches, so I am not used to a pink beach like they are used to up in the Westfjords. So I was thoroughly enjoying this tour and strutted along this beautiful pink beach very happy and felt like I was abroad.

I felt like I was on a beach in Spain and wanted to jump into the sea. The Atlantic ocean is too cold to swim in, so I didn't do it though.

Our fellow passengers were from Hong Kong and they asked if we could stay on this beach all day long as the air was so fresh and clean :) We Icelanders are used to having clean air here in Iceland and don't think about it much, but hearing this gave me a different perspective on what we Icelanders take for granted. One has got to love clean fresh air and appreciate it!

We had a museum to go to and after that the vast red beach, Rauðasandur, which is unique in Iceland, so we had to carry on.

Our next stop was at the museum Hnjótur by Örlygshöfn. This museum depicts the history of fishing, farming and daily life in the southern part of the Westfjords through the ages.

The museum was founded in 1983 when Egill Ólafsson and his wife donated their museum to the county. Egill was an avid collector of things from the past and got rewarded the Order of the Falcon for saving cultural values from being lost. Kudos to such forward thinking people!

On the 12th of December 1947 the British trawler, Dhoon, stranded by Látrabjarg sea-cliffs in fog and heavy undercurrent. There were 15 people aboard the trawler, 12 of which were saved under very difficult circumstances by the local volunteer rescue teams and the local farmers. The farmers heaved the men up on a string 190 meters in cold and bad weather. These farmers used such a string to hang from the cliff while collecting bird eggs.

A documentary was made on this rescue operation a year later, where the men re-enacted their rescue operation. The first half of the film had been shot and the second half was being shot at Látrabjarg when the trawler Sargon stranded at Hafnarmúli by Örlygshöfn. The men had to hurry up to rescue the Sargon and the director of the documentary filmed the rescue operation of the trawler Sargon using that footage in his documentary on the British trawler Dhoon.

We watched half the documentary at Hnjótur museum and I was reduced to tears when watching this film, what hardship and what charity. What resilience of these Icelandic men not giving up until they had rescued most of the English seamen from a sure death here on the biggest bird cliff in Europe in the dead of winter! What an extraordinary achievement!

There is a monument at Hnjótur, in honour of the Icelandic rescue workers, to commemorate their achievements in rescuing local and foreign fishermen from the dangers of the sea. And in remembrance of those who couldn't be saved.

Several other shipwrecks have been in this area. In the winter of 1918 (a winter which was one of the coldest winters in Iceland), an unknown trawler sank by Örlygshöfn. The weather was calm, but there was heavy snow with zero visibility.

The farmers at Örlygshöfn heard a steamship whistle, but couldn't see anything. In the spring a shipwreck was found by Látrabjarg bird cliff. It was unidentifiable and nothing has ever been found out about this ship, not even its nationality. What a tragedy :(

We had had some coffee at the museum, but by now it was time to have a picnic. We sat down by the ocean by Gjögrar harbour in Örlygshöfn and enjoyed the views of Patreksfjörður fjord. In the distance, we could see Patreksfjörður village.

Our travel companions had only bought the Látrabarg part of our guided tour so after the picnic we left them at their hotel, which was in the vicinity. Our next destination was the extraordinary Rauðasandur beach.

Rauðasandur (or Rauðisandur) Red Sands is one of Iceland's most beautiful beaches. It is a beautiful orange/red beach, which stretches for 10 km from Látrabjarg bird-cliff in the west towards Skorarhlíðar mountainside in the east.

Rauðasandur orange reddish colour stems from pulverised scallop shells from the Breiðafjörður bay. The name can also derive from the settler in this area, Ármóður rauði Þorbjarnarson or Ármóður the Red.

It is such a beautiful place and I couldn't get enough of it - I felt like I had stepped into a fairytale world :)

It is just lovely being here in the tranquillity and beautiful pristine nature. The road leading to Rauðasandur is a winding and steep road though, so I was happy to be driven here by an experienced driver and a guide. I have been to Rauðasandur before on the western part where we had to walk on water, as it were, to reach to the red sand.This time we visited the eastern part of Rauðasandur, where it was easy walking down to this beautiful beach.

On this side of Rauðasandur, a crime story took place. By the farm Sjöundá around 1800, there lived two married couples. Bjarni and Steinunn, the husband from one marriage and Steinunn, the wife from the other marriage, had an affair. They ended up murdering their spouses. They were placed under arrest and trialled for the murders, found guilty and sentenced to death. Bjarni was executed in 1805 in Norway but Steinunn died in prison in Reykjavík. Such a tragedy.

This is also a historical place for Icelanders and all of us had to learn by heart a poem in school which is directly related to this area. It is a poem by our beloved poet, Matthías Jochumsson, on Eggert Ólafsson, who drowned in 1768 off the shore by Skor on the eastern part of Rauðasandur.

You can see many grey seals at Rauðasandur and in the summertime, there can be up to 100 seals resting and sunbathing in this area. I know that Westfjord Adventures offers a special tour to the seal colony at Rauðasandur as our driver told us so,and next time I visit the Westfjords I would love to join that tour. There are so many tours I want to join in the Westfjords that I will have to camp somewhere for a week and go on tours every day.

After spending some time at Rauðasandur it was time to head back. By the time we reached the junction of Látrabjarg, where we had left our car, it was already 5 pm. Time had flown by on this extraordinary tour. I said goodbye to Úlfar, our expert guide, and Gunnar, the driver, whom I was later to meet at the Jewel of the Westfjords, Dynjandi waterfall

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